The Raptors are one of only seven NBA teams that fully control all of their own future first-round picks, which is why they can’t be ruled out as a potential suitor for Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo, Mavericks big man Anthony Davis, or any other star who comes available in the future, according to Eric Koreen of The Athletic.
However, Koreen argues Toronto should avoid both Antetokounmpo and Davis because the Raptors still wouldn’t be good enough to contend for a title after the potential acquisition.
A deal for Antetokounmpo would likely start with the Bucks asking for Scottie Barnes and draft picks, Koreen writes, and while Barnes is probably unlikely to ever reach Antetokounmpo’s level as a perennial MVP candidate, he’s also nearly seven years younger, makes less money, and has a less extensive injury history. There’s also the significant question of whether Antetokounmpo or the Bucks would be open to the idea.
If Barnes isn’t involved, Koreen continues, the Raptors could try to offer a package of RJ Barrett, Jakob Poeltl, Collin Murray-Boyles and picks; ignoring whether the Bucks would accept such a trade, Toronto would be left without a true center, the team’s primary position of weakness, would have less depth, and fewer ways to improve the roster going forward.
Davis would certainly cost less to acquire from an asset standpoint, considering he’s older, less impactful, and has a longer injury history than Antetokounmpo, Koreen notes. But the trade would still require giving up two starters to make the money work, hurting the Raptors’ depth, and although Davis is obviously a major upgrade over Poeltl, he doesn’t like to play center and they share a couple of weaknesses (contract situations and injuries), Koreen observes.
Here’s more on the Raptors:
- Michael Grange of Sportsnet.ca covers similar ground, writing that Davis would probably make more sense to pursue from a cost-acquisition standpoint, but noting that there are logical reasons why a deal might not appeal to Toronto, Dallas or Davis. While it remains to be seen whether or not the Raptors will target a major move, they will certainly be active ahead of the February 5 deadline — they’re currently less than $1MM above the luxury tax line and will undoubtedly dip below that threshold in some fashion, per Grange.
- As for potential trade targets, Grange suggests the Raptors try packaging some combination of Ochai Agbaji and other salaries to find a backup center who is also capable of filling in as a starter when Poeltl is unavailable, as Sandro Mamukelashvili is more of a “face-up power forward” than a true big man. The Raptors have expressed some interest in Davis’ teammate Daniel Gafford in the past, according to Grange, who says the “most enticing” hypothetical trade target might be Magic center Goga Bitadze. Grange lists five other big men the Raptors could consider as well.
- Barrett, who has been sidelined since November 23 due to a right knee sprain, will return to basketball activities sometime this week, the Raptors announced on Monday (Twitter link via Grange). Barrett received a PRP injection to promote healing in his knee last week. The Toronto native is the team’s third-leading scorer.
- Second-year sharpshooter Jamison Battle, who sprained his left ankle on Dec. 5 and missed the past two games, was active for Monday’s contest at Miami, tweets Zulfi Sheikh of Sportsnet. Battle is only averaging 8.1 minutes per game across 17 appearances, but he has been highly efficient offensively in a very small sample size; he is 12-for-15 on twos (80%) and 13-for-22 on threes (59.1%).

man giving up anything beyond salary a solid young player and 1 first rounder for AD would be crazy, 40 games of the best center in the league isn’t enough and he’s not that
Ummm, Giannis makes Toronto a contender, prob even the favorite in the East. Davis doesn’t make anyone a contender.
If you add Giannis directly to the current roster, yes, but you have to subtract a few pieces to make the trade happen, and that makes it very iffy.
Quickley, Poetl, Agbaji and 2 firsts for Giannis.
Giannis on raps absolutely is a contender….but weak minded folks love to hate.
I wouldn’t accept that if I’m Milwaukee. Poeltl is 30, Quickley is 26 so probably has reached his peak (but easily the most valuable asset in this offer), and Agbaji isn’t really a worthwhile piece for Milwaukee to return since they’ll no longer be playoff contenders. The two FRPs would fall late in the round so the players have to be better. They would surely get a better offer from someone else.
If I am Milwaukee I would get one player that’s on the cusp of being a franchise changing player. OKC had a bunch of picks yes, but they still had to hit on Shai in the deal from LAC. Look at Utah, they have all these picks but didn’t acquire any young emerging player, and they are finally setting their nucleus on whose going to be the alpha dog on the next great Utah team. I don’t believe SB or Barrett are those guys. They aren’t headliners to a Giannis package (then again not many guys are). If Bucks are only wanting pick compensation in return, it’ll turn out horrible for them I believe. At least 2029 until they start seeing some of these picks become the future of the Bucks.
OKC is not trading for him though.
100% I don’t see the need for acquiring Giannis. They can/will still win another title without him.